12.19 Thule

GREENLANDTHEORY.COM Thule or Ultima Thule is the
capital of the Greco-Roman Empire in Greenland. The city is not to be confused
with Thule, a small
village allegedly located in Greenland, home to ancestors of the Inuit. The
term “Capital” (C+P+T+L) acronymically and/or consonantly equates to “Cap
Thule” a reference to Greenland, the capstone of the Earth, and its capital
city of Thule. Coincidentally, Nazi mystics within the Thule Society identified Ultima Thule as the capital of ancient Hyperborea, a lost ancient landmass in the north near Greenland. Thule, which is also spelled Thula, Thila, or Thyïlea,
is, in classical European
literature and maps, a region in the far north that is often considered to be
an island like Greenland. In the Late Middle Ages and Renaissance, Thule was
often identified as Greenland. The term Ultima Thule in medieval
geographies denotes any distant place located beyond the "borders of the
known world". Sometimes Ultima Thule is even used as the Latin name for Greenland. The term “Thule” (T+L)
is consonantly the same as the term “Italy” and “Italia” (T+L), the former home
of the Greco-Roman Empire. The term “Gentleman” (G+N+T+L+M+N) was ultimately
derived from Thule, meaning “Gen (Begin) Thule Man”. According to Anna Komnene, a Greek princess, scholar and physician, the Varangian Guard
(i.e., Vikings) were "axe-bearing
barbarians" who originated "from Thule”, further corroborating
the notion that the Greco-Roman
Vikings emanated from Greenland. In Norse mythology, the god
of Odin refers to himself as "the great Thul",
an apparent tribute to the capital city of the Greco-Roman Empire which
worships Odin to the north in Greenland. The Roman poet Silius
Italicus wrote that the people of Thule were painted
blue, a veiled reference to the 13
Bloodlines of Rome which are considered blue-bloods. In his 12th
century commentary on the Iliad, Eustathius of Thessalonica wrote that
the inhabitants of Thule were at war with a dwarf-like
stature tribe only 20 fingers in height. This reference is in respect to
the Greco-Romans who interbred with the native Giants of
Greenland, becoming giants themselves. Said giants have since declared eternal
war on the non-giants (i.e., dwarfs) which reside in the underworld. Because
Thule is the capital of the Greco-Roman Empire, numerous Roman-English worlds
have been derived from its name (e.g., battle; fatal; fetal; mental; metal; tail;
tale; talent; talon; teal; tell; toll; toil; told; tool; satellite; telegraph;
telephone; telescope; television, etc.).

Greco-Roman Accounts of
Thule Because Thule is the capital of the Greco-Roman Empire in Greenland, it
is found throughout its respective history and mythology. Pytheas of Massilia was the first to write of Thule in his now lost work, “On the Ocean”. He wrote that Thule
wass the farthest most northerly of the Britannic Islands and that there the
circle of the summer tropic is the same as the Arctic Circle”. In “Geography” (c. 30 AD), Book I, Chapter 4, the Greek philosopher Strabo mentions Thule while describing Eratosthenes' calculation of "the breadth of the inhabited
world". He cites Pytheas who stated that Thule "is a six days' sail
north of Britain, and is near the frozen sea". Strabo ultimately concludes
in Book IV, Chapter 5 that, “Concerning
Thule, our historical information is still more uncertain, on account of its
outside position; for Thule, of all the countries that are named, is set
farthest north". The Roman philosopher Pliny the Elder’s book “Natural History” (77 AD) also cites Pytheas' claim that Thule is a six-day
sail north of Britain. When discussing the islands around Britain in Book IV, Chapter 16,
he writes, "The farthest of all, which are known and spoke of, is Thule;
in which there be no nights at all, as we have declared, about mid-summer,
namely when the Sun passes through the sign Cancer; and contrariwise no days in
mid-winter: and each of these times they suppose, do last six months, all day,
or all night”. The “no nights at all” reference is apparently in respect to Earth’s second moon which is located above Greenland, refracting the light of
the sun and thereby rendering day-like conditions year round. In the 1st
century BC, Greek astronomer Geminus of Rhodes claimed that the name of Thule went back to an
archaic word for the polar night phenomenon, stating that Thule was "the place where the sun goes to rest". In refining Thule's location, Pliny the Elder places
it along the most northerly parallel as depicted in Book
VI, Chapter 34 in which he wrote “Last of all is the Scythian
parallel, from the Rhiphean hills into Thule: wherein (as we said) it is day
and night continually by turns (for six months)". The Roman geographer Pomponius Mela also placed Thule north of Scythia. The
Greek astronomer Cleomedes also referenced Pytheas' journey to Thule, but added no new information. The Roman historian Tacitus described in his book how the crews of Roman ships
sighted Thule when circumnavigating Britain, a claim which appears to be
purposely misleading. Lastly, the Roman philosopher Seneca
the Younger wrote of a day when new lands will be discovered past Thule. Taken collectively, these accounts suggest that Thule
(i.e., Greenland) lies to the northwest of the British Isles, likely under the
North Star (i.e., Earth’s second moon).

Classical and Post-Classical Accounts of Thule
References to Thule, the capital of the Greco-Roman Empire in Greenland, are
found in both the classical and post-classical eras. Both Orosius (384-420 A.D) and Dicuil (late 8th and early 9th century) describe Thule as being
North and West of both Ireland and Britain. Dicuil described Thule as being
beyond the Faroe Islands
which are located off the coast of Scotland. Historian Procopius wrote that Thule is a large island in the north that is inhabited
by twenty-five tribes, an apparent reference to the 13
Bloodlines of Rome which now reside in Greenland. He also wrote that when
the Heruls
returned, they passed the Varni and the Danes and then crossed the sea to Thule, where they
settled beside the Geats. Virgil coined the term “Ultima Thule”
in “Georgics”, meaning
“furthest land” as a symbolic reference to denote a far-off land or an
unattainable goal.Dionysius
Periegetes in “De situ habitabilis orbis”
as well as Martianus Capella also touched upon the subject
of Thule as did Avienus in his “Ora Maritima” where
he added that during the summer on Thule night lasted only two hours, an
apparent reference to Earth’s
second moon which is located above Greenland, refracting the light of the
sun and thereby rendering day-like conditions year round. The Latin grammarian Gaius
Julius Solinus (3rd century AD) wrote in “Polyhistor” that Thule was a 5 days sail from Orkney Islands off
the coast of Scotland: “...Thyle, which was distant from Orkney by a voyage of
five days and nights, was fruitful and abundant in the lasting yield of its
crops”. The 4th century Virgilian commentator Servius also believed that Thule was located close to the
Orkney Islands: “...Thule; an island in the Ocean
between the northern and western zone, beyond Britain, near Orkney and Ireland;
in this Thule, when the sun is in Cancer, it is said that there are perpetual
days without nights…”. Claudian (5th century AD) wrote in his poem, “On the Fourth Consulship of the Emperor
Honorius”, Book VIII, that “Thule was warm with the blood of Picts;
ice-bound Hibernia [Ireland] wept for the heaps of slain Scots."
In “Against Rufinias”, the Second Poem, Claudian writes of "Thule lying icebound beneath the
pole-star", another apparent reference to Earth’s second moon. Jordanes in his “Getica”
also wrote that Thule sat under the pole-star. In “Consolation of Philosophy”, Boethius states “…For though the earth, as far as India's shore,
tremble before the laws you give, though Thule bow to your service on
earth's farthest bounds….”.
Lastly, Petrarch (14th century) wrote in “Epistolae
familiares” that Thule lay in the unknown regions of the far north-west. Taken collectively, these accounts
suggest that Thule (i.e., Greenland) lies to the northwest of the British
Isles, likely under the North Star (i.e., Earth’s second moon).

Political Cover for Thule In order to provide both historical and political cover for Thule, the capital of the Greco-Roman
Empire in Greenland, a number of different places and people have been given
the name of Thule. For example, Thule or New Thule is the main town in the northern part of the Qaasuitsup, Greenland. Its name was recently changed to Qaanaaq in order to dispel the notion that
the mythical Thule is located in Greenland. TheThule People, which are the ancestors of all modern Inuit peoples,
allegedly reached Greenland by the 13th century, settling in Thule or New Thule. Interestingly,
modern historical accounts state that the Inuit were in contact with the
Vikings, confirming, albeit in a de facto manner, that the Greco-Roman Vikings emanated from Greenland. In 1775, Captain James Cook allegedly discovered Thule Island and Southern Thule, giving them the name of Thule because they seem to be at the
end of the world. Allegedly located in Greenland, Thule Air Base is
the United
States Air Force's northernmost
base. It was reportedly the location of the 1968 Thule Air Base B-52 crash as well as Thulegate, a political scandal concerning nuclear weapons. Needless
to say, these Thule-based names, especially Thule Island and Southern Thule, were given in order to confuse humanity in
respect to the true location and nature of Thule.

Thule SocietyIn what appears to be both historical and political cover for the Great White Brotherhood of Thule, Greenland, the Thule Society was founded in Munich, Germany, on August 18, 1918. The occultist
group was reportedly named after Thule which was believed by Nazi
occultists to be the origin of the Aryan race. Considering that Nazi
mystics within the Thule
Society identified Ultima Thule as the capital of ancient Hyperborea,
as a lost ancient landmass in the extreme north near Greenland, it
can be deduced that the Thule Society is an underworld version of the original
Thule Society (i.e., Great White Brotherhood) located in Greenland. Originally
a "German study group", members of the Thule Society had to sign a special "blood
declaration of faith"
concerning their lineage: "The signer hereby swears to the best of his
knowledge and belief that no Jewish or colored blood flows in either his or in
his wife's veins, and that among their ancestors are no members of the colored
races.” On January 5, 1919, Anton
Drexler, together with the Thule Society's
Karl Harrer, established the Deutsche
Arbeiterpartei (DAP), or German Workers' Party.
Adolf Hitler joined this party in September of 1919. By the end of February
1920, the DAP had been reconstituted as the Nationalsozialistische
Deutsche Arbeiterpartei
(NSDAP), or National Socialist German Workers' Party, generally known as the
Nazi Party. The logo of the Thule
Society is an “SS” or Swastika, a symbol which was eventually adopted by the
Nazi Party. According to Hitler biographer Ian Kershaw, the Thule Society’s "membership list... reads like a Who's Who of early Nazi
sympathizers and leading figures in
Munich", including Rudolf Hess, Alfred Rosenberg, Hans Frank, Julius Lehmann, Gottfried Feder, Dietrich Eckart, and Karl Harrer. While the ideology and philosophy of the Thule Society was
the same as that of Hitler and the Nazi Party, according to Johannes Hering,
"There is no evidence that Hitler ever
attended the Thule Society”. Nonetheless,
it has been argued that some Thule Society members and their ideas were
incorporated into the Third Reich. In “Der Mann, der
Hitler die Ideen gab” (1985), a book by Wilhelm Dahm,
it is written that, "The Thule Gesellschaft name originated from mythical
Thule, a Nordic equivalent of the vanished culture of Atlantis. A race of giant supermen lived in Thule, linked into the
Cosmos through magical powers. They had psychic and technological energies far
exceeding the technical achievements of the 20th century. This knowledge was to
be put to use to save the Fatherland and create a new race of Nordic Aryan
Atlanteans. A new Messiah would come forward to lead the people to this goal." The
“giant supermen” is an apparent reference to the Giants of Greenland which founded the original Thule Society. Lastly, in what
appears to be more historical and political cover for the Great
White Brotherhood, the White Order of Thule was an American
society formed in the mid-1990s that described itself as an "esoteric
brotherhood working toward the revitalization of the Culture-Soul of the European
people". Like the Thule Society, the White Order of Thule is also based on
Neo-Nazi and racists ideology.

Thule Society in Popular CultureTributes to the Thule Society are found throughout popular culture, including but not
limited to: Anime: “Fullmetal
Alchemist: The Conqueror of Shamballa”
(2005), an anime in which the Thule Society play a major role; Books: “Laundry
Files” (2004-2014), a series of novels
and short stories by Charles Stross which references the Thule Society; and “Secret World Chronicles” (2006-2009), a series of books by Mercedes Lackey in which the Thule Society is behind the attacks on Echo
facilities on February 15, 2004; Comics:
“Cloak and Dagger” (1982), a comic by Steve Gerber in which the Thule Society appears; and "Fear
Itself" (2011), a Marvel Comics
series in which the Thule Society plays a role; Film: “Hellboy” (2004), a film in which Professor Bruttenholm refers to
Adolf Hitler joining the Thule Society in 1937, stating that they were "a
group of German aristocrats obsessed with the occult." Television: “Supernatural” (2005-Present), a television show which featured an
episode entitled "Everybody Hates Hitler" in which a group of Thule
Society members seek out a lost ledger containing information about their
experiments with necromancy; and Video
Games: “Area
51” (1995-2007), a video game series
of novels in which the Thule Society is mentioned as being the occult force
behind the Nazi Party; “Clive Barker's Jericho” (2007), a video game which features the Thule Society; and
“Wolfenstein” (1981-2014), a video game series featuring the Thule
Society.

Thule in Star Wars
In order to muddy the waters in respect to Thule, the capital of the Greco-Roman Empire in Greenland, while
simultaneously paying tribute to it, Thule is a named planet within the Star Wars Saga. According to Wikia,
"Thule is a semi-arid planet known for
its rich savannas.
Continually bombarded by lightning storms, Thule was a hidden Sith stronghold. The
rocky outcroppings which broke the plains were charred black from being hit by
lightning. This charred rock later served as a form of sustenance for unusual, bioluminescent
moss that made the rocks glow with an eerie light." Anakin Skywalker stated in respect to Thule, "I know where it is. The planet is called
Thule. Thousands of years ago it was an ancient Sith stronghold. Ulic fought
there during the war. That's where the Dark Reaper is buried."
Lastly, the Battle of Thule was the final
battle during the Dark Reaper crisis during the Clone Wars,
in which the Republic managed to locate and destroy the Separatistsuperweapon.